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Asian central banks target offshore forex trading amid currency pressures

Created at 11 Jun · 8:10 AM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

Asian central banks are increasing oversight of offshore currency derivatives to curb speculation and stabilize regional currencies. High oil prices, foreign fund outflows, and a strong dollar are pressuring currencies like the Indonesian rupiah, Korean won, Indian rupee, and Philippine peso.

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Key Numbers

$10 trillionglobal daily FX market size
4%non-deliverable forwards share of FX market
$100 millionIndia's limit on banks’ net open position
18,000Indonesian rupiah per dollar level breached
$115 billionestimated Reserve Bank of India short dollar book
$30 billionrecord capital outflows from Indian stocks this year
$78 billionnet foreign investment exit from South Korea's stock market in 2026

Who's Involved

South Korea's finance ministry
announced stepped-up oversight of offshore currency derivatives
The Philippines
asked banks to limit non-deliverable forward contracts to economic purposes
India
tightened limits on banks’ net open position
Bank Indonesia
raised interest rates and is intervening in currency markets
Michael Wan
Senior currency analyst at MUFG Bank Ltd.
Deutsche Bank AG
provided data on the FX market
Australia & New Zealand Banking Group
provided analysis on NDF market drivers
Reserve Bank of India
actively selling dollars to stabilize the rupee
Prabowo Subianto
President of Indonesia
Lavanya Venkateswaran
Senior economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp.

↳ Why This Matters

Asian central banks are taking unprecedented steps to control offshore currency trading, highlighting significant pressure on regional currencies due to global macro factors and geopolitical risks. These actions could impact global FX markets and signal potential further policy rate hikes in affected economies.

Key facts

  • Asian central banks are intensifying scrutiny of offshore currency derivatives to combat speculation.
  • Currencies in South Korea, India, and the Philippines have hit multi-year or record lows.
  • High oil prices and foreign fund outflows are exacerbating currency pressures.
  • Central banks are intervening in offshore markets, impacting foreign exchange reserves.
  • Analysts suggest that fundamental economic shifts are necessary for sustained currency recovery.

Asian central banks are intensifying efforts to curb offshore foreign exchange speculation as a strong dollar, high oil prices, and foreign fund outflows pressure regional currencies. Policymakers are increasing oversight of derivatives like non-deliverable forwards (NDFs), which allow trading outside local markets and can significantly influence Asian currencies due to onshore convertibility restrictions.

South Korea's finance ministry announced it will enhance oversight of offshore currency derivatives. The Philippines has requested banks limit NDF contracts to economic purposes, while India has reduced banks' net open position limits to $100 million. Indonesia, which recently raised interest rates, has stated its central bank is actively intervening in global currency markets to support the rupiah, which has fallen below 18,000 per dollar.

These measures aim to mitigate the impact of offshore trading on local markets. The Korean won has reached its lowest point since the global financial crisis, and the Indian rupee and Philippine peso have hit record lows. Analysts, however, express skepticism that these actions alone will reverse the downward trend without fundamental economic improvements.

NDFs constitute about 4% of the global $10 trillion daily FX market but can have an outsized impact in Asia. Authorities have previously attempted to reduce this influence; India, for instance, has worked to attract NDF activity onshore to its GIFT City financial hub. Experts note that easing onshore restrictions and ensuring sufficient liquidity could diminish the need for NDFs, as seen with the Singapore dollar and Thai baht.

Despite warnings against offshore markets, some central banks have intervened directly, contributing to a decline in regional foreign exchange reserves. The Reserve Bank of India has been particularly active in selling dollars, with its offshore derivative positions likely reaching around $115 billion. Bank Indonesia has also sold dollars to stabilize the rupiah.

Some investors argue that currency weakness stems from country-specific economic issues rather than offshore trading. India is experiencing significant capital outflows, with global funds withdrawing a record $30 billion from stocks this year. In Indonesia, concerns about the economic outlook and fiscal trajectory under President Prabowo Subianto are growing. The Philippines faces renewed inflation pressure from high oil prices, and South Korea has seen substantial foreign investment exit its stock market despite recent rallies.

Frequently asked questions

NDFs are cash-settled derivative contracts allowing investors to hedge or speculate on currencies outside local markets, particularly useful where onshore convertibility is restricted.

Offshore trading, especially NDFs, can add to currency pressures and volatility, influencing local markets from global financial hubs even when onshore restrictions exist.

Key factors include a strong US dollar, high oil prices stemming from geopolitical conflicts, and significant outflows of foreign capital from regional stock markets.

They are increasing oversight of offshore derivatives, tightening trading limits, intervening directly in currency markets, and in some cases, raising interest rates.

What Happens Next

01Further intervention in offshore currency markets by Asian central banks is possible.
02Policy rate hikes are anticipated for India, the Philippines, and Indonesia.
03Continued monitoring of capital flows and economic fundamentals in the region.

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How It Developed

Asian central banks are increasing oversight of offshore currency derivatives.
South Korea's finance ministry will step up oversight of offshore currency derivatives.
The Philippines asked banks to limit non-deliverable forward contracts to economic purposes.
India tightened limits on banks’ net open position to $100 million.
Indonesia unexpectedly raised interest rates and is intervening in currency markets.
The Indonesian rupiah breached 18,000 per dollar.
The Korean won fell to its lowest since the global financial crisis.
The Indian rupee and Philippine peso hit record lows.

Sources

T1
Asia’s currency fight moves offshore as central banks push backThe Economic Times

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